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Service-learning.


This special issue features a variety of scholarly articles that explore applied research on service-learning and its potential for expanding student learning, improving communities, and building bridges across cultural/social/geopolitical boundaries. Several of the authors include specific guidance on course development, discussing the challenges and opportunities for implementing student-led projects in diverse contexts (urban and rural, K-12 and higher education higher education

Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art.
, global and domestic). Foley fo·ley  
n.
1. A technical process by which sounds are created or altered for use in a film, video, or other electronically produced work.

2. A person who creates or alters sounds using this process.
 describes his own five years of experience in teaching a service-learning course, describing the ways in which he has learned through experience the value of integrating objectives such as development of cultural awareness and appreciation of diversity in shaping the ongoing evolution of a capstone course in Construction Management. Purmensky explores expanding roles for technology in enhancing reflective Refers to light hitting an opaque surface such as a printed page or mirror and bouncing back. See reflective media and reflective LCD.  feedback in service-learning courses, building capacity in collaboration with community partners, and strengthening learning communities.

A unique component of service-learning project design is its focus on reciprocity reciprocity

In international trade, the granting of mutual concessions on tariffs, quotas, or other commercial restrictions. Reciprocity implies that these concessions are neither intended nor expected to be generalized to other countries with which the contracting parties
 and mutual exchanges of new knowledge and understanding. This dimension is highlighted in articles by Jones & Esposito, Millhouse, Gibson, Paris Gibson, Paris, 1830–1920, American pioneer and politician, b. Brownfield, Maine. After serving in the Maine legislature he moved to Minneapolis, where he built the first flour mill and started woolen mills. By 1879 he was in Fort Benton, Mont. , and Kapucu et al. Articles by Jones & Esposito and Millhouse examine some of the unique challenges of developing authentic partnerships between universities and communities in the context of foreign studies programs. Their articles illustrates the opportunities for continual learning and reflection while striving to find the balance between responding to community needs in unfamiliar cultural terrains and developing college students' academic/professional skills. Gibson carries this point even further by reflecting on the role of faculty members in designing, evaluating and documenting the value of service-learning courses and programs of study. Rather than striving to maintain a neutral stance and remain on the outside as a disengaged dis·en·gage  
v. dis·en·gaged, dis·en·gag·ing, dis·en·gag·es

v.tr.
1. To release from something that holds fast, connects, or entangles. See Synonyms at extricate.

2.
 observer, Gibson writes about the powerful ways in which her students' community service learning projects have transformed her own experience in academia. On a broader level, her reflective essay helps scholars/practitioners to assess the value-added of community-based learning when instruction focuses, at least in part, on social justice themes.

The Paris article approaches other borders and boundaries in his description of service-learning with prison inmates, citing Foucault and Angela Davis' critical analyses of the prison-industrial complex The prison-industrial complex refers to interest groups that represent organizations that do business in correctional facilities, such as prison guard unions, construction companies, and surveillance technology vendors, who some people believe are more concerned with making more . His article discusses possibilities for university students to discover the humanity of inmates at the intersection intersection /in·ter·sec·tion/ (-sek´shun) a site at which one structure crosses another.

intersection

a site at which one structure crosses another.
 of prison education with service-learning courses. Kapucu and Petruscu address issues of capacity building in the community. Their article compares and contrasts two community service learning courses in Florida and Michigan Michigan (mĭsh`ĭgən), upper midwestern state of the United States. It consists of two peninsulas thrusting into the Great Lakes and has borders with Ohio and Indiana (S), Wisconsin (W), and the Canadian province of Ontario (N,E). , exploring the differences and similarities between practical approaches, goals and outcomes in the two, using concepts of social capital and capacity building in building effective partnerships between universities and community organizations.

Articles by Halfacre et al and Waggener provide new perspectives on study of service-learning's impacts on student participants. Their articles look at the ways in which well-designed programs can enhance student attitudes, civic commitment, and social/political connections to their own communities. Regan further explores service-learning impacts by engaging special education students in a teacher preparation program with emotionally disturbed children.

In what ways will service-learning expand opportunities for student learning, improve communities, and build bridges across boundaries in schools, communities and universities in the 21st century? This issue of AEQ AEQ Academic Exchange Quarterly
AEQ Aequalis (Latin: Equal)
AEQ Aplicaciones Electronicas Quasar (Spanish: Quasar Electronic Applications)
AEQ Auto Enter Queue
AEQ Advanced Equalizer
 presents the work of scholars who describe and analyze these and other important dimensions of service-learning's impacts on their own research and practice. We hope that these papers will engage readers in considering new possibilities for their own research and practice.

Judith H. Munter, Ph.D.

Associate Dean for Research, College of Education, University of Texas at El Paso The University of Texas at El Paso, popularly known as UTEP, is a public, coeducational university, and it is a member of the University of Texas System. The school is located on the northern bank of the Rio Grande, in El Paso, Texas, and is the largest university in the  
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Editorial
Author:Munter, Judith H.
Publication:Academic Exchange Quarterly
Date:Mar 22, 2006
Words:582
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